Literature DB >> 32253305

Aquatic stem group myriapods close a gap between molecular divergence dates and the terrestrial fossil record.

Gregory D Edgecombe1, Christine Strullu-Derrien2,3, Tomasz Góral4,5, Alexander J Hetherington6, Christine Thompson7, Markus Koch8,9.   

Abstract

Identifying marine or freshwater fossils that belong to the stem groups of the major terrestrial arthropod radiations is a longstanding challenge. Molecular dating and fossils of their pancrustacean sister group predict that myriapods originated in the Cambrian, much earlier than their oldest known fossils, but uncertainty about stem group Myriapoda confounds efforts to resolve the timing of the group's terrestrialization. Among a small set of candidates for membership in the stem group of Myriapoda, the Cambrian to Triassic euthycarcinoids have repeatedly been singled out. The only known Devonian euthycarcinoid, Heterocrania rhyniensis from the Rhynie and Windyfield cherts hot spring complex in Scotland, reveals details of head structures that constrain the evolutionary position of euthycarcinoids. The head capsule houses an anterior cuticular tentorium, a feature uniquely shared by myriapods and hexapods. Confocal microscopy recovers myriapod-like characters of the preoral chamber, such as a prominent hypopharynx supported by tentorial bars and superlinguae between the mandibles and hypopharynx, reinforcing an alliance between euthycarcinoids and myriapods recovered in recent phylogenetic analysis. The Cambrian occurrence of the earliest euthycarcinoids supplies the oldest compelling evidence for an aquatic stem group for either Myriapoda or Hexapoda, previously a lacuna in the body fossil record of these otherwise terrestrial lineages until the Silurian and Devonian, respectively. The trace fossil record of euthycarcinoids in the Cambrian and Ordovician reveals amphibious locomotion in tidal environments and fills a gap between molecular estimates for myriapod origins in the Cambrian and a post-Ordovician crown group fossil record.

Keywords:  Arthropoda; Myriapoda; euthycarcinoid; molecular dating; terrestrialization

Year:  2020        PMID: 32253305     DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1920733117

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A        ISSN: 0027-8424            Impact factor:   11.205


  2 in total

1.  Myriapod genomes reveal ancestral horizontal gene transfer and hormonal gene loss in millipedes.

Authors:  Wai Lok So; Wenyan Nong; Yichun Xie; Tobias Baril; Hai-Yao Ma; Zhe Qu; Jasmine Haimovitz; Thomas Swale; Juan Diego Gaitan-Espitia; Kwok Fai Lau; Stephen S Tobe; William G Bendena; Zhen-Peng Kai; Alexander Hayward; Jerome H L Hui
Journal:  Nat Commun       Date:  2022-05-30       Impact factor: 17.694

2.  Crab in amber reveals an early colonization of nonmarine environments during the Cretaceous.

Authors:  Javier Luque; Lida Xing; Derek E G Briggs; Elizabeth G Clark; Alex Duque; Junbo Hui; Huijuan Mai; Ryan C McKellar
Journal:  Sci Adv       Date:  2021-10-20       Impact factor: 14.136

  2 in total

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